On this day in 1998, a concert organised to raise funds and awareness for charity organisation Amnesty International took place

Titled “The Struggle Continues”, the concert was one in a series of shows organised by the US Section of Amnesty for the charity that ran from 1968 to 1998.

“The Struggle Continues” was held on December 10, the exact 50th anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and was held in Paris, France, where the original declaration was signed. The concert featured Peter Gabriel, Bruce Springsteen, Tracy Chapman, Alanis Morrissette, Shania Twain as well as Robert Plant and Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin.

Originally the concert was only able to be heard on a live BBC broadcast and later on a pay-per-view special in 1999 until the concerts were released on CD, iTunes and DVD in 2013.

LED ZEPPELIN
LED to GOLD

Printed & Ebook Available here

ON THIS DAY IN 1998, SIR GEORGE MARTIN ANNOUNCED HIS RETIREMENT FROM THE MUSIC INDUSTRY AFTER AROUND 50 YEARS OF SERVICE IN VARIOUS ROLES

Martin was most well-known for being the producer behind the Beatles’ hit records throughout the years, as well as working with a number of other renowned artists.

By his own admission, Martin was never a “rock ’n’ roll person”, but saw the opportunity to have a bit of fun and reclaim some youthfulness in life through The Beatles, whom he still refers to as “the boys”, and all of whom have praised Martin for his efforts in the studio, calling him the Fifth Beatle. He produced over 30 number one hits in the UK, working alongside the likes of Elton John, Kenny Rogers, Celine Dion and Little River Band. Martin also worked on music for films and television.

Sir George Martin won multiple awards and accolades for his time in the industry, including a number of Grammy’s, Doctorates in Music and a knight ship. He broke a number of records, including being one of only a handful of producers to work on number one records in three or more consecutive decades, from the 1960’s to the 1990’s. Despite all of this, Martin remained humble, courteous and was regarded by many as a gentleman of popular music. He tragically passed away in March 2016 of unknown causes and his estate is now survived by his wife of nearly fifty years and four loving children.

CHRIST YOU KNOW IT AIN’T EASY
JOHN AND YOKO’S BATTLE FOR PEACE

Printed & Ebook Available here

ON THIS DAY IN 1995, THE WORLD LOST THE CHARISMATIC FRONTMAN FOR THE GRATEFUL DEAD, JERRY GARCIA

Garcia passed at 4:23am on the morning of the 9th from a heart attack, while staying a San Francisco drug rehabilitation clinic. He had long struggled with various addictions, as well as health issues like diabetes and heavy sleep apnea. A public memorial was held on the 13th, which drew close to 25,000 fans to the Polo Fields of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, and hundreds of flowers, gifts and photographs were produced buy the mourners.

Jerry Garcia is commonly remembered for his work with The Grateful Dead, one of the most significant counterculture bands of the period, and was considered the bands spokesperson, a role he often fought and resented. He also played in a number of side projects and solo albums. With over 15,000 hours of his guitar work saved, he is considered one of the most recorded guitar players of all time.

Garcia was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994, a year before his death and has since received numerous posthumous awards, including number 13 on Rolling Stone’s list of “100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.” A number of festivals, concerts and charity events have also been held in his name and continue to be held, as well as memorial statues and buildings.

CHRIST YOU KNOW IT AIN’T EASY
JOHN AND YOKO’S BATTLE FOR PEACE

Printed & Ebook Available here

SEBASTIAN CHASE ADDRESS

When I was first invited to speak to this seminar on the subject of A & R, I thought, “No problem, there’s a lot that I can say on that subject.” As the time drew nearer, I thought I’d better prepare a paper on the subject. And so, I began. A & R is an abbreviation for the term Artists and Repertoire. It is used to define that component of a record company’s structure that involves an A & R Department, a Director, a Manager or a Person. A & R functions to deal with aspects of the company’s activities related to evaluation of talent, signing artists and producing the company’s artistic output. Seems like simple straightforward stuff. Well not so. I had just started out and I was already stumped. I’d turned into a roundabout that had arterials shooting off in every direction. The function is easy to explain but the form is endless with variation. Very quickly I arrived at the entrance of a maze – where do I go, what will I say? Well, consider that the A & R function in its origin had two separate and distinct strains. Firstly, the dominant strain was concerned with the matching of songs or repertoire with the singers on a label’s roster. For example, Paul Anka’s My Way, sung by and made popular by Frank Sinatra, and later of course de-popularized by Johnny Rotten.

This type of A & R was mainly practised by major record companies and labels which had A & R departments dealing with that specific agenda. These A & R departments were concerned with the discovering and launching of a star, and then finding the right material to have hits and thus maintain the star’s status and record sales. Probably the most notable and indeed quotable of this type of A & R man was Columbia’s Mitch Miller, the bearded bandleader who went on to become the head of A & R for one of the biggest record companies in the business. He spent his days looking for new songs for a formidable label of stars that included Doris Day and others of her ilk. The second A & R strain was practised mainly by small independent labels such as Chess Records, the label that recorded Chuck Berry and a host of others. Their prime A & R focus was concerned with original artists performing their own original songs. The most notable example of this kind of A & R approach was John Hammond, who replaced Mitch Miller at CBS and signed many original artists including Bob Dylan. At the time, Dylan was often referred to as “John’s Folly”. John also signed American’s working-class hero, Bruce Springsteen. Following the breakthrough success of the Beatles and of Bob Dylan, this second stem of A & R became the dominant force – original artists performing original material. The commonality shared by both these strains is that they were driven by record companies and directed an activity that was exclusive to those operations.

As we head into the year 2000, there’s ample evidence that both strains can co-exist. Contemporary original artists such as Lenny Kravitz are either making obvious references to past performers writers and music styles – in this instance, Jimi Hendrix – or they are covering previous hits, such as the Lemonheads’ version of Simon and Garfunkel’s Mrs Robinson. So, to recap, the traditional form of A & R function in the 40s, 50s and on to the mid-60s was primarily concerned with matching the singer and the song. It then became essentially concerned with original artists recording their own songs. And from the mid-80s, the two forms of A & R have to some extent become integrated with the strong emphasis on original artist output. I’m assuming that most of the people attending this forum are concerned with original artists and original output. I have therefore focused on A & R as it pertains to this particular approach. In my opinion, A & R in the modern context is not longer – and has not been for a long time – an activity exclusively conducted by record companies and entrepreneurs. In the contemporary music industry, A & R has become a process where artists are no longer launched as much as they are developed. By definition, the A & R process begins with the artist. The artist – by his or her own artistic and creative output – initiates the A & R concept.

In this context, the function of the A & R department of a record company is to recognize artist merit and decide on its suitability to their business enterprise as they see it in that particular point in time. The emergence of the global marketplace, coupled with the continuing advancement of technology in the areas of recording, communication and transportation, has brought about a trend towards A & R becoming more de-centralized. REM developed a career worldwide form their provincial base of Athen, Georgia, which is relevant to your community because here you are in Brisbane and you’ve got to address you’re A & R process so that you can beam from Brisbane into Sydney and Melbourne and nationally. REM is American of course and did their thing out of America but it remains a very relevant role model to look at. The Allman Brothers Band did the same thing out of Macon, Georgia, a few years earlier. Nirvana and Mudhoney are from Seattle and Crowded House did not need to expatriate to gain worldwide market acceptance. DEF FX are only three years old but already they’ve toured America three times. They have an American record deal, but they live and record in Sydney. It’s apparent that all of the bands I’ve mentioned knew how to get signed. They had established strong provincial markets that grew slowly and cost-effectively. I think it’s really important for people to focus in on what it costs to gain success. If you’re too expensive, you’re probably going to deny giving somebody the opportunity to sign you. So, you have to look at costs as being relevant to the A & R development program. These groups grew from regional to state to national and international markets. They developed a culture and a commercial track record to attract the big boys of the A & R world. They found or created advantages to assist negotiation of the most important document of their entire career – the major international record deal. They met the A & R process head on and half way. The good news about de-centralized A & R is that it is heading your way.

It is up to you to make sure that you are noticed. The best way to do that is to start heading towards them. Meet them half way. Don’t wait for them to come knocking on your door. You can do this by releasing records – even record that you initially consider to be demo tapes. If you send a demo to a record company, it should be produced in such a way that it can be converted into a record. If you can get something released, then you start the process of developing your market. You’ll instigate radio airplay – even if it’s on a narrowcast station format – you’ll also instigate print reviews, critical acclaim. These are all things that you’ll eventually use to convince someone else that they should invest money in you and your career. But there is a point where excessive demo-ing becomes absolutely useless, in my opinion. It might take some investment on your part. If you’re asking somebody else to invest in your career, at some point you’ll have to consider the scenario of – Are you worth investing in yourself? What I’d like to do at some point in these proceedings, is to take you on a slight journey – which consists of basically of eleven steps, starting from the first time you learn to play through to when you’re looking like nailing down a major record deal. This evolution can be portrayed as a railway journey with various stop stations and junctions to the main line.

So, with apologies to Thomas the Tank Engine and to Tommy Emanuel, I’d like to get on board as we ride the Gold Train. It’s the only way you’re ever going to get from point N for Nowhere, to Point S for Success and the various stopover in between. A lot of you here will already have gone through Station One, which is where you learn to play an instrument, including the human voice. You’ll never get anywhere without passing through Station One. It’s a perquisite to every aspiration. Station Two is the crucial early process of practicing, rehearsing, skilling yourself in you craft and getting it to a proficient level. Station Three is a key station where you are beginning to inter-act with your musical peers and with the music industry at large. You’re starting to network, beginning to gain some concept of how the industry works. You’re getting educated. It’s why you’re here now. Station Four is where you branch line meets the main line and you begin station one of your serious commitment period. You’re finding ways of gaining support relationships with agents, managers, club bookers, etc. Self-managing comes into focus as does the overall self-A & R process whereby the act must firm up what it wants to sell. If you don’t know what you’re selling, it’s unlikely that anybody else in the industry will want to buy it.

You must develop a sampling of your image and your musical direction. Connecting with manager at this point in your career is a most important thing because you require the assistance of someone to be part of guiding you through to all the further station stops. Station Five is the career-joining junction where you must come to terms with your recording directions. Undertaking the production of a demo or self-made EP for selling at gigs or using to create other opportunities. This will be used to not only sell to the public but to influence the infrastructure of the established music industry. Station Six is identification time. Identifying not only what you’re trying to sell but WHERE you’re trying to sell and HOW. Develop an approach pattern and style of presentation that will impress and assist rather that detract from what you’re trying to project musically.

Station Seven brings you into presentation mode when you attempt to evolve from provincial to national level. Station Eight has the potential to make you feel great – if you latch on to a national distribution deal with either a major or an independent record label. Station Nine is where you explore the obvious benefits of having achieved national visibility of your product and the resulting coast-to-coast visibility. You tour, do media interviews, TV shows, anything to put public focus on your act. Station Ten provides the territory and opportunity to consolidate your support systems and develop strategies to fine tune your targeting. If it’s worth doing, it’s worth doing for the world. No more short cuts. Planning your connection into the global market by seeking an international distribution deal with a major label. Station 11 is not quite heaven but you’re on the right route. Time to reflect and re-aim. Everything up until now has been a rehearsal for the main chance, for an emerging artist whose ambition is to connect into a global market, you need to attract the right kind of record deal.

With the right kind of capital behind that record deal. It will more than likely be provided by a major label because indies don’t have sufficient money for that sort of deal. So, everything that you’ve done in the previous eleven steps has really been an A & R process to connect with the A & R process of a major record company to give you the funds to continue your career in a global sense. So, A & R isn’t just choosing the song or making the product. It has tremendous financial implications. For instance, the A & R area is where artists will spend most of their money in any record deal. That’s where they end up in debt to the label in terms of video costs, record production, some of the tour support that goes into promoting the sale of those records. So, you can’t detach A & R from the entire process of you career. It’s fundamental – the heart of everything that you do. If you’re going to make it, you’ll make it because you got you’re A & R process absolutely right. Imbued in the A & R process is the need for a career strategy. You must know which steps to take first. A lot of bands rush in and do a major record deal as soon as they get the opportunity. Quite often it’s too much for the Oz market and way too cheap for the international market. It just doesn’t have the funds and the built-in mechanisms that will carry the ambition. The ambition may be there, it sits in abstract to the actual agreement.

So, the agreement cannot function if it doesn’t have sufficient capital reserves built into it. That’s the theory. From a practical point of view, if you’re sitting in Brisbane, I think that the obvious thing is that you make a demo and send it to the major labels. There’s only seven of them. If they don’t sign you, you have to consider the question of what happens now. Do you give up or do you keep going? If you keep going, how do you keep going? Majors are constantly being presented with bands at various stages of development with various political connections at management level. Glenn Wheatley might have a second artist to pitch – he’s obviously going to be able to reach the majors a whole lot quicker than someone representing a band out of Brisbane. Unless that particular act had something incredibly dynamic or extraordinary happening. Trouble is, you have to be almost developed for them to recognize that.

So, you’re in the position of having sent in your demos and you don’t get a response. The route that music history has shown works very well (not only here in Oz but right back to the 50s in America), is to take the independent route. Beg, steal or borrow – release your own record. Form an association with an indie label which understands what you’re trying to do, one that can complement and is willing to invest some time or money or a combination of both – and you get things moving. If you look at the example of REM, they didn’t sign with Warners until probably their fifth album, but when they did do the deal (not that I’m privy to the details of it), one would imagine that the deal is structured to suit REM having a long-term career in the music business

– and not being a fly-by-night act. They had established value when they went to do the deal
– they’d established track records that the majors could assist – even the accountants at the majors could assist that value.
On a smaller scale, you can create that situation here. We went through exactly the same premise with DEF FX. When we at Phantom Records wanted to sign DEF FX, we didn’t have a lot of money, but we scrounged together a couple of bucks and put out an EP. We worked the EP hard and eventually it became number one on the Indie charts. So, the band had a start, a status, some recognition in a chart somewhere that meant something. Because it was only an EP, it was affordable. The effect of the EP was that it expanded the bands world market, it expanded all of the exposure points to them live. They came to Brisbane and drew a lot of acclaim and gained an audience, local bookers became familiar with them. They were opening up the market – meeting the A & R process. They had started to radiate outwards from Sydney – ignore the fact that most of the majors are located in Sydney in this parallel. They were showing commitment, working and developing their skills. They were developing their performance values. So that at any time when the A & R director of a record company came to see them, they were just better and better in the performing aspects. People started recognizing their songs, their repertoire. An A & R director could see that they were getting song acceptance from their audience. The band was honing all its entertaining and perform skills. They had time to develop ideas for making videos. In the meantime, we were teasing all the majors. We got some light offers. We had a strategy in place well in advance – we wanted an act that could make it right around the world. The first offer we got was for $100, 000. That might sound like a lot of money but when you’re trying to establish an international career, I can assure you that $100, 000 doesn’t even start to have any impact these days. Obviously, we said “no” to the offer. We had no option after that but to produce another EP. The Water EP original sold 84 copies and then two years later, it sold 10, 000. The second EP started off at 2, 500 copies and come in at #2 in the charts. The band toured the entire country in the next six weeks and hustled their new EP. They didn’t wait for radio stations to play them. If you’ve made a record and you’re waiting for Triple M to play it, you could be waiting a long long time. The idea is that YOU take control of the A & R process. You learn to understand you’re position in the marketplace and you go about improving it.
With DEF FX, as we went on down the track, more offers came in. This time it was $250, 000. It still wasn’t enough to develop our objectives, so we said, “No thanks”, and moved on with another EP. By this time, we were able to construct a deal with a major that provided the ban with the facilities to move out of the country and work the American market. They were eventually signed by BMG and have done three tours of America. They haven’t made it yet. But the fact is they can support themselves by touring. They’ve gone past a certain threshold that might have broken the band up 6 or 12 months previously. Just by not having sufficient money to keep going. It was part of our strategy and we were able to overcome it. The band could have gone out and courted a major for a year and still be stuck at home. Nobody would have known who they were. The process of development would have to start a year later, and they wouldn’t have had any means of supporting themselves. Perhaps they would have lost the plot and disbanded. At any point, a major which is reviewing you can decide to sign you up. If you’ve been able to figure out your ambitions and how to set them out, remember that the major needs to have them explained. The point about having consideration for how the other party sits comes into account. We wanted to be able to go to the majors with a track record of 10, 000 units sold to show that we were committed to what we’re doing, we’ve taken these steps and made this investment and sold this many records. We’ve taken a direction. Depending on what style of band you’re involved with, you have to be able to assess which particular record company is most suited to you’re A & R process. Some labels have A & R people that like heavy metal – if that’s not your bag, you’re best to forget them. The A & R person is the gateway to the record company. They’re the initiators of the relationship – they’re the people who motivate everything from recording budgets to marketing to sales and everything else. If you approach it slowly and carefully, it gives you time to develop what you’re trying to say artistically. It allows you to bring in all your infrastructure – allows you to network with the media. Enables you to gain an understanding of the processes that you go through – and that you’re going to have to repeat if you leave this country to take on another market. That period is an invaluable learning experience. An invaluable achievement. Remember that it’s not often that artists get second chance out of major record company contracts. A major deal will last for five albums usually – about eight years of your life. If you’re lucky enough to make it past albums one or two, you’ll probably be bonded with that relationship for eight years. If I was an artist, I’d be paying a lot of attention to what I’m going to be spending eight years of my life doing, and how the relationships are going to work.

RITCHIE YORKE’S ARTICLE

HERE

CHRIST YOU KNOW IT AIN’T EASY
JOHN AND YOKO’S BATTLE FOR PEACE

Printed & Ebook Available here

FROM STREET LEGAL TO EASY STREET

The first responsibility of the artist is to himself.” (Miles Davis, 1961)”You have to learn how the business works. You have to knoiv how deals are made. You have to look at the casualties in real life. If you don’t learn how to survive, that will be you! They’ll flush you right down the toilet the minute they can. They’ll squeeze you dry. So unless you adopt somewhat of a capitalistic philosophy, you will get raped.” (Billy Joel, Musician Magazine, 1993)

Love him or despise him, you have to admit the billion dollar man knows well and true what he’s rapping about and he doesn’t beat around the bush.

The same might well be said about John Kenny, the second of the keynote speakers at the 100% Juiced! music business seminar set to take place this Sunday in the Ithaca Auditorium at Bris­bane City Hall. A highly regarded national expert on le­gal matters relating to intellectual copy­right (the modern term for the ownership of anything you creatively produce as an individual), John Kenny has demon­strated the audacity to represent both Rose Tattoo and lndecen|Obsession. “The opportunities are there,” It takes balls to run a cred-chancing forward play like that, but Kenny likes to work in the clinches and under the scrums. Though his present legal outlet, Kenny and Co focuses on company law and intellectual property, John clearly hasn t’ forgotten his Sydney roots as a young legal representative of such late 70s Oz icons as Mi-Sex and Dragon. With current and recent music industry clients of a diverse nature, and a grow­ing role as a lecturer in Queensland cen­tres of learning, Kenny s’ forthright presentation at 100% JUICED! this Sun­day will be “written from the perspective of a musician working ui a professional band in Brisbane at present.” “Essentially,” notes Kenny, “a musi­cian band member is likely to encounter eight different kinds of agreements – namely:-

1. Partnership with fellow band mem­bers;
2. Live performance with venue own­ers;
3. An agreement with the agency cho­sen by the band to obtain work;
4. A management agreement;
5. A production agreement with a local studio, especially if the band decides to self-finance and distribute their own CD product, prior to achieving interest from a major record company;
6 & 7. Hopefully and ultimately a re­cording contract and a publishing agree­ment in respect of the exploitation of the band s’ songs; 8. Merchandising agreements to ex­ploit other aspects of a band s’ presence and stature.”

John feels that the players in the local scene can make a difference in relation to six of the above eight contracts. The opportunities are there,” he in­sists, n“ow it is a question of whether the local managers, musicians, agents and venues wish to find new, fairer and more effective ways of running industry.” “With one of the liveliest alternative scenes in the country, the question is: can innovation in the business of music in Brisbane match the innovation in the music?” Only time will tell – the ramifications of 100% JUICED! will go a long way to­wards determining how soon and how smoothly* such an evolution in Sunshine State rock culture could become a real­ity. And a welcome one at that. “If Brisbane,” ponders John Kenny, “is to start producing national and interna­tional level artists and continue to re­main based here, it may not be good enough merely to have a distinctive Bris­bane sound, the opportunity and the challenge is to have a distinctive way of doing business in Brisbane.” John will also focus on an introduction to the basics of that thorny question of copyright in musical works “This is a very misunderstood area by musicians,” claims Kenny. “But the whole copyright issue is crucial for musi­cians. Their songs are their birthright! By grasping the mechanics of copyright, they can hang on to the most valuable asset they will create while they are mu­sicians.” This is gourmet food for serious men­tal digestion. Now I know that lawyers at large don t’ exactly hold down a cool image with the average muso in these times of reces­sion. They have often been cast in the role of leeches who overbill and under­deliver.
Recently I read somewhere in an over­seas musical journal that the world mu­sic business is basically controlled by 50 American showbiz lawyers Personally I would have thought it was much less than that figure. In North America, speaking from experience, I can assure you that all too often dealing with lawyers can be like crossing a mine field. The only guarantee being that whatever you’re pursuing is going to cost you heaps.

Our infant emerging Brisbane music scene is different. Different even from the scenario that Billy Joel paints at the top of this piece. But not all that much different. John Kennys’ contributions to your mu­sic industry mindset will be worth the price of admission alone because this sort of info normally doesn t’ come easily or cheaply. If you r’e really serious about what you’re doing, w e l’l look forward to seeing you in the Ithaca Auditorium, Brisbane City Hall, on Sunday for an experience that is sure to broaden your particular playing field of musical enlightenment. And the best of good luck to every one of you for the musical future.

SEBASTIAN CHASE ADDRESS

HERE

CHRIST YOU KNOW IT AIN’T EASY
JOHN AND YOKO’S BATTLE FOR PEACE

Printed & Ebook Available here

On this day in 1988, Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon finally dropped off the charts

After the album’s release in 1973 it rushed to the top of the charts. Despite only spending a week at the number one position, The Dark Side of the Moon was extremely well-received, gaining good reviews from critics and listeners alike and spending a massive 741 weeks in the Billboard Top 200 albums charts.

The group’s eighth album builds upon ideas they had attempted in past live shows and recordings as well as covering numerous themes such as greed, conflict, death, insanity and the passage of time. The theme of insanity was reportedly inspired by the deterioration of former lead vocalist Syd Barrett’s mental state after leaving the band. Each side of the album is a continuous piece of music with five tracks on each side beginning and ending with a heartbeat. This concept leads to the entire album being an exploration into the nature of the human experience.

Despite only spending a week at the top of the charts in the US, and never reaching number one in the UK, The Dark Side of the Moon became one of the most popular and highest selling records of the era. It is now recognised on numerous lists for the greatest or most popular albums of all time lists and continues to sell well around the world as it is considered a “must-own” album for collectors.

CHRIST YOU KNOW IT AIN’T EASY
JOHN AND YOKO’S BATTLE FOR PEACE

Printed & Ebook Available here

ON THIS DAY IN 1987, THE WORLD SAID GOODBYE TO A GREAT ARTIST IN ANDY WARHOL

Renowned for his pop-art movement, Warhol was already the most successful and highest paid commercial illustrative artist in New York before his work even began showing in galleries. However, his more controversial work soon began to attract attention, affording him the opportunity to diversify as an artist.

Warhol soon worked in a variety of mediums, including painting, silkscreening, photography, film and sculpture, as well as managing the underground successes of The Velvet Underground, for whom he designed the famous debut album cover featuring a peel-able banana sticker. The Velvet Underground was just one story of a success bred from beneath Warhol’s influential wing, he also brought attention to major artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat, Julian Schnabel and Keith Haring, as well as other actors, musicians and personalities.

An attempted murder attempt in 1968 left Warhol shot, and post-recovery he decided to relieve his personal involvement in filmmaking, focussing more on his artworks. He designed cover art for more bands, including The Rolling Stones’ Sticky Fingers and John Lennon’s Menlove Ave, and influenced a number of other performers, including David Bowie, who would later play Warhol in the 1996 Basquiat film.

He received surgery for recurring gallbladder problems and was reportedly recovering well when an unexpected post-operative irregular heartbeat struck him at 6:32am, killing him before any nurses could help. His funeral was held shortly after, where Warhol was buried in a coffin covered in white roses and asparagus ferns, alongside a copy of Interview magazine, an Interview t-shirt, and a bottle of the Estee Lauder perfume, Beautiful.

CHRIST YOU KNOW IT AIN’T EASY
JOHN AND YOKO’S BATTLE FOR PEACE

Printed & Ebook Available here

ON THIS DAY IN 1985, THE VERY FIRST LIVE AID FESTIVAL WAS COMMENCED AT WEMBLEY STADIUM IN LONDON

The brainchild of Bob Geldof, singer of Irish rock group, the Boomtown Rats. Geldof travelled to Ethiopia in 1984 after hearing reports of the horrific famine that had already killed hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians. The scenes he saw in the area affected him greatly and as soon as he returned to London, he organised some of Britain and Irelands best pop performers to write the benefit single, “Do They Know It’s Christmas?”. Geldof was joined by members of Culture Club, Duran Duran, U2, Wham! and Phil Collins in a makeshift group they called “Band Aid”. The song was the most successful single in Britain upon it’s release and it raised more than $10 million for relief efforts in Ethiopia.

Inspired by the success of this single and it’s power to make a positive change in the world, Geldo proposed Live Aid, a global charity concert aimed at increasing awareness and raising funds for the African’s plights. The festival was organised in less than 10 weeks, and over 75 acts performed, including David Bowie, Run-DMC, Sade, the Beach Boys, Queen, The Who, Neil Young, Eric Clapton, Elton John and Madonna. The performances were primarily held at Wembley Stadium for a crowd of 70,000 or at the Philadelphia JFK stadium, where 100,000 watched on. Satellits beamed a live stream of the event to over one billion viewers in 110 countries. At least 40 of these countries held telethons during the broadcast to allow for fundraising.

A reunion of Led Zeppelin also occurred at this concert, with Phil Collins taking the drummer’s position. Paul McCartney and The Who’s Pete Townsend held Geldof on their shoulders for the collective performance of “Do They Know It’s Christmas?”. The concert, opened by Prince Charles and Princess Diana, went for over six hours and raised a further $127 million for famine relief in Africa, as well as encouraging Western countries to send surplus grain to help feed the country. Bob Geldof was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II shortly after the festival for his efforts.

CHRIST YOU KNOW IT AIN’T EASY
JOHN AND YOKO’S BATTLE FOR PEACE

Printed & Ebook Available here

AT THIS TIME IN 1985, LEAD SINGER OF CREEDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL, JOHN FOGERTY, WAS AT THE TOP OF THE CHARTS WITH HIS THIRD SOLO STUDIO EFFORT, CENTERFIELD

After the band broke up in 1972, leaving the members embroiled in legal battles over business and creative control, John Fogerty prepared another lawsuit for his prior record label, Fantasy Records. Unfortunately, the label owned Fogerty’s career until he produced eight studio albums for them which he refused to do, putting all of his music on hold until Asylum Records bought out his contract for over $1 million.

Once more free to pursue his musical career, John Fogerty released one self-titled album under Asylum, though they rejected his next album, Hoodoo, causing Fogerty to decide to take a break from the music industry. Eventually he fell in with Warner Brothers and with their help released Centerfield. The album performed extremely well, shooting to the top of the charts in the US and Sweden, and gaining high positions in many other countries charts, including number four over here in Australia. Critically, the album couldn’t have fared much better, with almost all publications praising the release and Fogerty’s impeccable songwriting skill.

The album was written and played entirely by John Fogerty, with the use of overdubbing to enable him to record multiple instruments. Unfortunately, this didn’t aid him when former Fantasy label boss Saul Zaentz sued him for copyright infringement, claiming the chorus on Centerfield’s “The Old Man Down the Road” was the same as one of Fogerty’s earlier recordings with Creedence Clearwater Revival, “Run Through The Jungle”. The case fell apart, however, when Fogerty took his guitar to the courtroom and made the differences clear. He subsequently launched a counter-case against Zaentz which he won easily.

It certainly seems that Zaentz acted as Fogerty’s nemesis, trying to block and obstruct his solo career at almost every turn. Fogerty was happy to fight back in most cases, such as recording “Zanz Kant Danz” which had to be re-titled to avoid a defamation lawsuit from the label boss. Ultimately though, no matter the attempts to sabotage or derail his career, John Fogerty was never distracted from his main goal – to make good music, and Centerfield stands as one of the proudest icons of this difficult and treacherous career.

LED ZEPPELIN
LED to GOLD

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ON THIS DAY IN 1980, JOHN LENNON AND YOKO ONO SET ABOUT RECORDING THEIR FINAL LP TOGETHER, DOUBLE FANTASY

Their first release following a five year hiatus in which the couple focussed on raising their son, Sean, the album was also the first to feature both Lennon and Ono since 1972’s Some Time in New York. The pair were both feeling inspired, Lennon from a sailing trip on treacherous waters and Ono by her husbands comments on contemporary work bearing similarities to her earlier work. The album then came together as a collection of songs where husband and wife would conduct a musical conversation, with the tracks sequenced as such, Lennon then Ono then Lennon.

Dozens of songs were produced for the album, many of which were used for the Milk and Honey album released in 1984. Yoko Ono approached veteran producer Jack Douglas, who claimed he would have a hard time making the demos any better, as they already had so much intimacy. A number of new session musicians were hired at Lennon’s request and the record was put together quickly.

The album initially performed well, reaching number one in the US charts. Some critics reportedly disliked the album, but it was named Album of the Year at the 1982 Grammy Awards. Sadly, John Lennon never got to receive this award after his tragic murder late in 1980, just three weeks after this album’s release.

CHRIST YOU KNOW IT AIN’T EASY
JOHN AND YOKO’S BATTLE FOR PEACE

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